Integrating Compositional
and Structural Diversity
in Heterometallic Titanium Frameworks by Metal Exchange Methods
Posted on 2024-11-01 - 18:03
The increasing use of Metal–Organic Frameworks
(MOFs) in
separation, catalysis, or storage is linked to the targeted modification
of their composition or porosity metrics. While modification of pore
shape and size necessarily implies the assembly of alternative nets,
compositional changes often rely on postsynthetic modification adapted
to the functionalization or exchange of the organic linker or the
modification of the inorganic cluster by metal exchange methods. We
describe an alternative methodology that enables the integration of
both types of modification, structural and compositional, in titanium
MOFs by metal exchange reaction of the heterometallic cluster Ti2Ca2. A systematic analysis of this reactivity with
MUV-10 is used to understand which experimental variables are crucial
to enable replacement of calcium only or to integrate metal exchange
with structural transformation. The isoreticular expanded framework,
MUV-30, is next used to template the formation of MUV-301, a titanium
framework not accessible by direct synthesis that displays the largest
mesoporous cages reported to date. Given that the interest of Ti MOFs
in photoredox applications often meets the limitations imposed by
the challenges of titanium solution chemistry to design concrete candidates,
this soft strategy based on preassembled frameworks will help integrate
specific combinations of metals into high porosity architectures.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Gómez-Oliveira, Eloy P.; Castells-Gil, Javier; Chinchilla-Garzón, Clara; Uscategui-Linares, Andrés; Albero, Josep; Almora-Barrios, Neyvis; et al. (2024). Integrating Compositional
and Structural Diversity
in Heterometallic Titanium Frameworks by Metal Exchange Methods. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c10444